@user1079641 after you get read in the two numbers (first and second), you could do "first.get_at(second) = first;". (It does create them in the reverse order than you probably expected, but that allows for an infinite number of powers to be used
woo! 9000+ rep again! and more badges! It's a good day!
@sehe I had a teacher give us a big lecture about how it's important to give clear expectations for all designs, and clearly specify what should happen in all cases. From that night's homework was this problem: "Write a function called IsFiveOrMore that takes a c-style string and returns true if the string contains more than five characters not including the trailing null."
I of course, turned in: bool IsFiveOrMore(const char*) {return true;} It's still my favorite homework ever.
I came pretty close to getting an Enlightened + Guru pair on my 92-vote answer. But I took a Populist badge instead. I'll take a gold badge over a pair of silvers anyday!
I have a bunch of lines of polynomials of different sizes, I am using string tokenizer to take coefficient and exponent of each part of the polynomial. How would I go about running a while loop that takes each line and using string tokenizer, creates and connects as many linked lists as needed in accordance with the length of the polynomials?
Well honestly I have no real good ideas, the only one I think could possibly work would be to iterate through each character of a line for two lines, compare them to symbols or numbers, and store the numbers into designated variables, after that (assuming all of your problems follow the same format as above) do the associated math operations on them.
you could make your program recognize each ^ symbol, store the number that follows directly after, and do the maths that way. Honestly (for now anyways) my brain is focused on "OO" programming, although I don't think there is a non object oriented way of doing this :P
So I have a while loop that captures each line of strings from an external file and separates them word by word using string tokenizer. Next, each word is to go into a linked list that is connected. Since each line is different size, I don't know how I would program it so the linked list is creat...
You could have a time delay between attempting to read the file, and if it detects any changes between the old and new iteration of the file, it shows it?
the problem is, how would i program the while loop to automatically create new nodes for a linked list and connect them everytime the string tokenizer gets a new word?
Then agreed with @DeadMG, Also, a web app that reads from a file would have to run from the servers computer (I'm assuming this is what you are trying to do) otherwise it would have to ask for permissions
I've created a simplified example showing a problem I'm struggling to solve. I'm trying to store in a std::tuple a varying number of values, which will later be used as arguments for a call to a function pointer which matches the stored types.
#include <iostream>
#include <tuple>
vo...
Maybe this particular example would have worked in C++03 (not considering the C++11-ness of the std::tuple) because it simply initializes the struct members.
is there an "On-key press" function in C++? I searched around on the internet a bit and all that came up was system("pause"), that isnt portable, so for now I am going with cin >> to an int or char.
@StackedCrooked Also, instead of implementing a deck of cards, I decided to make a small space station sim :D That should definitely help with the math functions
> Implement DR1454. This allows all intermediate results in constant expressions to be core constant expressions (including pointers and references to temporaries), and makes constexpr calculations Turing-complete. A Turing machine simulator is included as a testcase.
From the Clang svn log
So, constexpr is Turing-complete. I believe there was a question about that on SO...
Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, Jordany, not to mentionIsrael/Palestine: bombings, plane hijackings everything. Same thing in Tokyo, Ireland, the U.S. and the whole of Africa. I guess it is the 'not my front-yard' syndrome. People sure wouldn't forget so easily if that bomb killed a dozen people in *their local market place. Disclaimer: I'm comfy talking from where I'm sitting.
@sehe yeah. guess I'm just a politically unaware idiot. I just thought that all terrorism was related to Al-Qaeda somehow, news channels seem to give that impression.
@Pubby Always that stupid "infinit memory" argument. The C++ language is, per specification, Turing-complete. It's just the implementations, that aren't. :P
@IntermediateHacker Well. No harm in learning late. Also, this is highly educational to me, since I generally dismiss the possibility that the media would totally rob people from the historical perspectives. It appears I'm wrong in thinking like that.
@IntermediateHacker Well, with Iran at spitting distance and almost squeezed off the peninsula by a military giant (Saud) I'd assume a little bit more awareness of the region :)
@CatPlusPlus No, really, what would I want a hot sexy girlfriend for? I'd much rather have a caring, loving, loyal, faithful woman to get old with. <insert outer shell citation here>
reminds me of my mom.
She's always giving me these lectures.
Choose someone who is educated, sensible, caring, knows how to cook, knows how to take care of children. Appearance doesn't matter. etc.
@IntermediateHacker Well, thing is you might come to the conclusion she and others were right. But probably only by the age you will be found saying the same. Just hope you won't be saying it in bitterness :)
@IntermediateHacker Although the 'knows how to cook' / 'how to take care of children' strikes me as more sexist than necesssary: Since you can do those things equally well, you might get a way with a somewhat hot&sexy woman :)
As far as parenting is concerned: teams work best, and research shows that children thrive in an environment where they can learn from many, different types of, role models
@jalf Btw, for me, MultiArray was surprisingly large, in terms of memory the types occupy. A simple boost::multi_array<char,2> takes 128 byte on a 64bit box
@sehe I was actually thinking of that at first. :P
@Xeo Valarray would have merit IFF you needed to do number crunching on it. Choosing the right layout you'd get automatic loop vectorization of arithmetic operation in with major compilers (Intell C++ and G++ have it)
@IntermediateHacker But be careful. Should the Librarian see this, you might find that, compared to him, I'm a considerable pleasant, nice, and patient kind of ape. He isn't content with explaining the difference between monkeys and apes, he just unscrews heads instead. Preferably those of humans too ignorant to remember the difference.
@IntermediateHacker I have another good reason for you to disregard outer appearance of females: The hottest woman I ever had in bed was not one you would have craned your neck to have a second look at should you pass her by on the street. But IME great sex will make you adore any woman, and make you think of her as the most beautiful thing on earth. Think again. What would you rather have — a girlfriend your friends envy you for, or one they should be envying you for? :)
Hi. I've got some old code, where I seem to be defining a virtual method of a class; i.e. one that would never be called. Is it necessary to define such a method, or can one leave it undefined?
Hmm, from a little search it seems one is expected to define virtual functions, which seems a little wacky.
@IntermediateHacker You're too young to worry about any of those things. Find someone who wants to be your girlfriend. Apply positive thought and effort, see what happens. If necessary, repeat.
@sbi Well they seem to think we all secretly want to participate in their machinations, just we don't know that we're supposed to do it on Meta… so maybe they just brought Meta here as a Valentine's gift!
@sehe Ah. I had flagged that guy who was banned the night before last, and then returned and revenge-flagged, rather than having cooled down, asking to shut him out for a while. Apparently they haven't banned him, though. :(
@sbi Well, the mods didn't stick around too heavily. Also, it was different mods (only Shog9 was there earlier) and I think I like Grace Note a bit better in matters of style.
I'm seriously worried (that makes it sound a bit dramatic) about Martinho. Has he ever been away for this long, without even a single warning in advance? We should send a search party out there
@sbi Haha. Hope so. I did drop him a mail on his gmail the other day. Haven't heard. Guess that means that it is safely harboured in his Junk mail filter, or indeed, he's trying to get electricity reconnected at his place